My opinion. The last Star Wars movie (Force Awakens) was horrendous it was more of remake than a continuation of a beloved piece of Sci-Fi Americana that has a well developed canon. I thought it was sooo forced and contrived. I can't blame Disney, because, in my opinion Rogue One is the best Star Wars Film. It was dark, it followed the canon, it had beloved characters (even if they were dead). AND! because finally we had Darth Vader in the suit kicking butt! I would have paid $20 USD just to watch Vader hacking away with lightsaber and force choke anybody; rebels, droids, bounty hunters, democrats, soccer fans anybody! Thank you Mickey!

I'd have to say Force Awakens was very mediocre. Story was lacking and character seemed un-interesting with no depth, with a forced story. Visually it looked great though.

But i'd have to say Rogue One has been my favorite of them all! Even though the out-come of the story was known, the story was well told, the characters had great depth and feeling. It felt gritty, visually looked great with some great throwbacks to the original movies. I even liked the cgi Tarkin, though the cgi stood out, i think it was done exceptionally well. For me this brought the old spark back for the movies and i hope will be the level on which the next movies will be done at.

I regard Rogue One as the best since the original trilogy, but that's a pretty low bar. By all the rules of melodrama, (a) characters dying to atone for their evil deeds need to have done those evil deeds on screen, and (b) if the good guys die at the end, their death has to be necessary and chosen--not just "everyone died because the ships which could have picked them up didn't arrive in time." The thing also cried out for a speech about why the Rebellion was worth fighting and dying for, which somehow no one made. See the John Wayne Alamo on these last two points.

As for TFA, Abrams doesn't actually tell stories: he makes set-ups for later movies. Sometimes, his trailers are a couple of hours long but that doesn't make them real movies. Yes, it looked great. The saying is "when old directors die, they become cameramen." Kubrik's Barry Lyndon is the proof. It looked as good as anything I have ever seen on film. Probably as good as anything I ever will see. It just wasn't a movie. Same thing here.

TFA was better then all but the first two movies, I enjoyed myself throughout the show and watch it on occasion. Can't ask for more really since NO film is going to take the place of the original Star Wars for me – before I saw it I shrugged my shoulders and said "just another stupid scifi movie". After I saw it I was a Star Wars junky – just bought a Star Wars shirt at Disney Springs made to look like it was one of the originals from 77, I love it.

"The thing also cried out for a speech about why the Rebellion was worth fighting and dying for, which somehow no one made.

I have to agree. In the original Star Wars, Luke says, "Of course I hate the Empire", yet he still wants to go to the Academy. ????And then Qi Gon says "We're not here to free slaves." Then what good are they?

The series BADLY needs to explain why we should root against stable government. V1 gives a very good example of why the Old Republic sucks. Why should anyone support it?You end up looking like Emperor Claudius, whose support for the Republic seems based on nostalgia at best.

Can we admit that Lucas could be incoherent? And that the story had to be pried out of his fingers and given to someone else? Even if it is…..

I am in the minority here, then. I didn't like Rogue One. It was boring as hell. When the main characters died I was so bored by then that I didn't care. My only thought was 'at last!' The best part of the movie were the 20-odd seconds of Darth Vader being badass in the corridor. The rest? Meh.

TFA was not as mediocre as Rogue One, but not for much.

So far I am less than impressed with the last installments of the franchise.

It's a nostalgia-driven remake that takes the advantage of 21st century special effects technology and advanced script writing techniques to create a movie that is presented as a sequel, yet is more or less identical to the original, if only heavily jazzed up.

I fairly enjoyed TFA although it felt like watching a remake. I also didn't like the main villain who seemed like Darth Vader's daughter. But my expectations were not high after the prequels from Hell.

Stars Wars is great film, but arguably a less than stellar piece of script writing, awash with what even by that point would have been considered clichés of science fiction writing. Basically it put a descent bit of well made Space Opera on the big screen for the first time. ESB better script with a bit Greek familial tragedy thrown at it. RotJ okay, but arguably re-treads SW and wraps everything up neatly enough for the moment.

TPM, AotC and RotS, kids film, stuff blowing up, and stuff blowing up with some, terribly wooden, character development and the entire Jedi order apparently failing to work out what Palpatine was! Still all watchable and at least kind of explain the run up to SW. Even with some the fairly jarring inconsistencies between the two trilogies.

Haven't seen Clone Wars, but Rebels is pretty good.

TFA, essentially a re-make of SW, with enough new bits and pieces to make it watchable, but bearing in mind it was probably aimed not at old fans but new ones! The script probably does more than SW in terms of character and storyline development, and at least competently so, though that perhaps depends whether some of the loose ends, improbabilities and inconsistencies are actually deliberate! But frankly it was never going to win any script writing awards.

Rogue One, really good, but arguably made for fans who were kids when the first ones came out – hence all the morally ambiguous stuff.

TLJ, guess we'll see, Luke's clearly had a rather large personal existential crisis and is clearly spooked by Rey's Mary Sue'ness, Ben's parental issues are clearly way out of hand, and does Rey go a bit dark side? Well may be the prophesy about the Jedi who will unify the force wasn't fulfilled by Anakin/Vader?

I loved the original Star Wars movies, and Lucas beat it out of me with the prequels. I did like seeing the Jedi as much more powerful than Kenobi had seemed, and cool light saber fights, etc, but I agree they didn't seem wise or good.

I have almost forgotten TFA. I'm sick of whiny characters (this bad guy wasn't quite as bad as Anakin), but it was OK. It had too many moments trying to make us feel something about old characters. I don't want to stew in nostalgia, I want a new story!

But Rogue One was the first movie since originals where I walked out thinking that I love Star Wars. It felt right.

The original trilogy has the nuts. Loved everything including the Ewoks. I was 9 with RoJ came out; it's been grandfathered into my imagination.

The prequels were a tragic disappointment. I was an adult when the came out and had much higher standards. I will admit that I can groove with PM a bit. People over react to Jar Jar and the kid jokes; it's bad but not that bad. The pod races don't make a lot of sense but they're fun. I never rewatched the other 2.

The new films are great. Look good, well acted, fun. RO does have a little bit of time to get cranking but once going it's a hoot. I understand the argument about Force Awaken feeling a bit derivative. But there are a lot of differences that all the web haters don't point out in their argument of it being the same. It shares similar pacing and motifs of the original. But the real world works in a circle no? Those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat. Unknown hero, pressed into service, to save the galaxy at the last moment, who finds out true source of power is the Force. Will she make the same mistakes as Luke? Will we make the same mistakes as our parents? Will our children make the same mistakes as ourselves. Going over the same ground with a different perspective -- still worth the journey? Worth a couple of hours to me.

I liked the originals, split by the special edition since chunks were interesting and others were just stupid.

The prequels were interesting at parts and stupid at others, basically it started showing what happens when Lucas is let loose without an editor who can tell him that things are bad ideas.

The Clone Wars movie should never have been released as a movie, it should have just been made into the first arc of the series, and if a movie would be made, do it after the team behind it gets into their roles enough to make something great.

The Force Awakens had a few interesting parts and a lot of design elements that I liked, but the movie just dragged on for me.

Rogue One is a good movie, and I like it…but…

Well, lets just say that I think J J Abrams push to end Legends to let him do whatever he wanted kind of hurts Rogue One most for me. TFA is at least covering a different story, but the Death Star Plans thing was already something that a LOT of Star Wars fans already knew how it happened in Legends, rather than what showed up.

I'm one of the people who grew up with Star Wars. I played the games, read the books, listened to the audio dramas, watched and rewatched the movies and TV series, collected the figures, and a whole lot more.

It's pretty much how I kept my sanity intact through Junior High and High School

The hardest reality for me….. I am biased by age…. when I was younger, the original trilogy was everything to a 7 year old….. BUT… looking at today's special effects, etc….. How can you not favor the newer movies? Even the horrible "young Anakin" stuff had awesome special effects….

I keep telling myself.. if they had the tech back in the 70's that they have now… the original 3 would still be the best….. hands down.

When Rogue One was over, I regretted that it was not to have sequels. Too me it was a great cast, a great story, and had so much energy. I wish it was somehow possible to take Episodes 1 – III and inject them with that same energy.

No that Han and Leia are gone, hopefully Episode VI and VII will break free of the Episode IV "origin movie" and soar. I do worry that Luke my become an anchor much like Han and Leia did for Episode IV.

I thought TFA was not bad, maybe a 7 out of 10. It doesn't quite measure up to IV or V, and I consider it on a par with VI. However, IMHO it is much better than any of the prequels, and I did find it entertaining.

Rogue One – meh. It could have been great, but I found the lead actress uninteresting, and I couldn't stand Diego Luna's character. They could have left him out of the movie entirely, and given all of his lines to the secondary characters, and it would have been a better movie for it.